Here is a photo of Sweetie and Lady during happier times. After Lady died, Sweetie was kicked out of the herd by Thunder. Lady always protected Sweetie from Thunder. She would literally stand between the two of them. So we brought the herd over here and closed the gate between our place and our neighbors (where the herd has lived most of its life). We hoped that Sweetie would find his way to the back end of the property where the other two stallions, Little One and Suki live. They had also been sent packing by Thunder but found a safe haven.
Our neighbor even tried to lure him with carrots back to the other stallions but Sweetie after making it half way turned around and went back up to the front ocean side of the property. A few days later he kicked the fence down between the two properties so he could rejoin the herd over here. However Thunder would have none of that and banished him down by the ocean on this property. So we sent the herd next door and closed the gate so now Sweetie is over here all by himself. It took him a few weeks and much coaxing to convince him he was safe here and did not need to stay down solely at the ocean end. He now comes twice a day to the corral for food.
He had some sores from Thunder but they are all almost healed now. He is calm once again but lonely and misses the herd. He can see them on the other side of the fence and sometimes I can see the herd visiting him at the fence line. He and Thunder eye each other across the fence and Thunder tried to kick the fence down to get at him again so we had to run a hot wire.
These are wild horses and have not had a halter on them. So getting Sweetie to his new home with Little One and Suki is not an easy task. We have plans to transport Sweetie with a lovely trainer but the date has not been set yet.

I am sad to report that the old mare Lady died last March. She was over 30 and some people think she may have been over 40 years old! She spent her whole life here on the coast and died on the land she lived her whole life on. She had been slowing down the last year and the last few months before she died she wasn't interested in carrots anymore but did enjoy the feed we give the herd.
On the whole she was a very sweet natured horse and you can see she had a sweet face. She was the only horse in the present herd that had ever been ridden.
We had a very rainy winter, especially in March and the herd was staying over next door where they have more trees to protect them from the rain. I saw Sweetie, Lady's son on the hill by himself for several days which was very unusual so I suspected that Lady was gone. Due to many very rainy days it took awhile before anyone could go over and find her. She is sorely missed.